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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Key words Mouse ; Enamel organ ; Enamel knots ; Cell adhesion molecules ; Differentiation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Cell-cell adhesion is fundamental in morphogenesis and is known to be mediated by several groups of cell adhesion molecules. Cadherins are a group of such molecules involved in the Ca2+-dependent cell-cell adhesion mechanism and are found in most kinds of tissue. In this study using indirect immunofluorescence microscopy, we analyzed the distribution of two kinds of cadherins, E- and P-cadherin, in developing tooth germs. In the molar tooth germs at the early bud stage, marginal cells of the epithelial tooth bud expressed both E- and P-cadherin, whereas central cells expressed only E-cadherin. At the cap stage, in addition to the cells of the inner and outer enamel epithelium, which outline the enamal organ, cells of the enamel knot, which is thought to control tooth morphogenesis, strongly expressed P-cadherin. The expression of P-cadherin was prominent in the inner enamel epithelium during the early to mid bell stage, and was also evident in the non-dividing cell masses at future cusp tips, which are the so-called secondary enamel knots. In the tooth germ at the late bell stage when the cells of the inner enamel epithelium began to polarize to differentiate into ameloblasts, the polarizing ameloblasts lost P-cadherin and strongly expressed E-cadherin. However, E-cadherin was also lost from polarized ameloblasts at later stages. The stratum intermedium and the stellate reticulum were E-cadherin positive from the bell stage onward even at the stages when the ameloblasts became E-cadherin negative again. These results suggest that the differential expression of E- and P-cadherin during morphogenetic stages plays a role in the regulation of tooth morphogenesis, whereas alteration of E-cadherin expression during later stages of tooth development is related to differentiation and function of the ameloblasts and other cells supporting amelogenesis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Anatomy and embryology 195 (1997), S. 193-202 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Key words Tooth germ ; Dental follicle ; Periodontal ligament ; Differentiation ; Eruption
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract  Developmental changes in the distribution of the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) were investigated in mouse incisors by means of the indirect immunofluorescence method. During the prenatal stages of development, NCAM was predominantly found in the dental follicle, but not in the dental papilla; the results were analogous to the distribution of NCAM during molar development. After birth, the expression of NCAM continued in the tissue between the enamel organ and the alveolar bone on the labial aspect. In contrast, the follicular tissue covering the lingual aspect of the incisor gradually lost NCAM immunoreactivity from its outer zone as it differentiated into the highly organized periodontal ligament. The intermediate zone of the ligament continued to express NCAM-immunoreactivity even in mice of 6 weeks of age. This pattern of NCAM expression was different from that found in molar teeth, where the organized peridontal ligament was NCAM-negative. The dental pulp, in which we previously reported that an NCAM-positive area appeared at later stages of molar tooth development, did not express NCAM immunoreactivity even at the latest stage of development covered in this study. These differences in the distribution of NCAM between the incisors and the molars might be related to the fact that rodent incisors continue to grow throughout the life of the animal.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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